The Supreme Court’s decision in Kingsley departs from a history of giving deference to law-enforcement officers.
The Supreme Court's job is to check the executive and legislative branches when they threaten liberty. In the War on Terror, it has sometimes failed.
Judges may be human, says the associate justice of the Supreme Court, but that doesn't mean they're swayed by the public or the president
After losing in court, he seems at a loss for what to do next.
The Supreme Court needs to make clear that police have broader powers than they realize to question suspects
The administration's position is so outrageous that the Supreme Court might hand Bush a humiliating defeat
The president may eventually face legal liability, but he will not face a public reckoning for his actions before November.
"Comparativism"—using foreign legal rulings to help interpret the Constitution—is startlingly on the rise in the U.S. Supreme Court